BEGINNER 101 · PUBLISHED 2026-04-28Updated 2026-04-28
Hygiene 101 — A Beginner’s Reference
Quick Answer: A beginner-friendly introduction to hygiene with glossary, quick-reference card, and primary sources. Practical food safety compliance guide for your business.
Expert-supervised by Takayuki SawaiGyoseishoshi (行政書士) — Certified Gyoseishoshi, JapanAll MmowW content is supervised by a nationally licensed regulatory compliance expert.
A beginner-friendly introduction to hygiene, with a glossary, quick-reference card, and links to primary authority sources.
Quick Answer
A beginner-friendly introduction to hygiene, with a glossary, quick-reference card, and links to primary authority sources.
Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points — a systematic approach identifying, evaluating, and controlling food safety hazards.
CCP
Critical Control Point — a step where control can prevent, eliminate, or reduce a food safety hazard.
PRP
Prerequisite Programme — basic conditions and activities for a hygienic food production environment.
Codex Alimentarius
International food standards by FAO/WHO to protect consumer health and ensure fair food trade practices.
SFBB
Safer Food Better Business — FSA food safety management pack for small food businesses.
Personal hygiene, equipment cleaning, and facility sanitation form the prerequisite-programme (PRP) layer that makes HACCP CCPs trustworthy. The international baseline lives in Codex General Principles of Food Hygiene[1]; in European Union, the national authority publishes a sector-specific cleaning and disinfection standard[2].
The 12 terms you must know
Hazard — defined in Codex Annex II and operationalised by national authorities.
CCP (Critical Control Point) — defined in Codex Annex II and operationalised by national authorities.
PRP (Prerequisite Programme) — defined in Codex Annex II and operationalised by national authorities.
Critical Limit — defined in Codex Annex II and operationalised by national authorities.
Monitoring — defined in Codex Annex II and operationalised by national authorities.
Corrective Action — defined in Codex Annex II and operationalised by national authorities.
Verification — defined in Codex Annex II and operationalised by national authorities.
Validation — defined in Codex Annex II and operationalised by national authorities.
Cross-contamination — defined in Codex Annex II and operationalised by national authorities.
Cross-contact (allergens) — defined in Codex Annex II and operationalised by national authorities.
Time-temperature abuse — defined in Codex Annex II and operationalised by national authorities.
Codex Decision Tree — defined in Codex Annex II and operationalised by national authorities.
Quick reference card
Indicator
Baseline
Target
Time
Measurement
Hand-wash compliance
60%
100% of mandatory triggers
2 weeks
Direct observation
Cleaning schedule completion
80%
100%
1 month
Signed CL
ATP swab pass rate
75%
95+%
1 month
Weekly ATP test
Pest sighting frequency
2–3/month
0/month
3 months
Trap log
Hygiene refresher training
Annual
Quarterly
6 months
Training record
Related free tool: Check your food quality for freeTry it free →
Piyo: Poppo-san, where does hygiene actually start in a real kitchen?
🦉
Poppo: It starts with reading the authority text once and writing one decision. Codex sets the international baseline; your national regulator binds you to a specific value or method.
Piyo: What if the staff resist the new rule?
🦉
Poppo: Show them the failure mode it prevents and the time it saves. Authority handbooks (FSA SFBB, MHLW small-business guidance) describe the minimum viable system — you adapt, you don’t reinvent.
🐮
Mou: Strong, kind, beautiful: hygiene made blissful for everyone in the kitchen.
Owl & Chick & Cow — an operator dialogue
Piyo: Is hygiene different from HACCP?
🦉
Poppo: Hygiene sits in the prerequisite-programme (PRP) tier. CCPs without PRP are like a roof without a foundation.
Piyo: Coloured cutting boards — really useful?
🦉
Poppo: Yes. Cross-contamination of pathogens / allergens reduces measurably. EU 852/2004 requires equipment-mediated cleanliness.
🐮
Mou: First, staff complained. Six weeks later, fewer mistakes during rush. Now: standard.
Piyo: ATP swabs?
🦉
Poppo: Adenosine triphosphate — measures invisible biological residue. FSA, FDA both recommend objective verification.
🐮
Mou: Weekly ATP for one year — pest sightings dropped to zero. Customers notice 'feels clean'.
Piyo: Strong, kind, beautiful — hygiene is the secret kept by every great kitchen.
Try the free MmowW CCP Decision Tree
Identify Critical Control Points for your menu in 5 minutes — aligned to Codex CXC 1-1969 Annex II, free in 6 languages.
Important disclaimer: MmowW is not a food-safety certification body. The content above is educational best-practice writing distilled from primary national-authority sources. Final responsibility for compliance with Codex, FDA, FSA, EFSA, MHLW, CFIA, or any other national requirement rests with the food-business operator and the relevant authority. Always verify with primary sources and your local regulator. Information is current as of the publication date and may be superseded by subsequent regulatory changes.
Takayuki Sawai — Gyoseishoshi
Licensed Gyoseishoshi (Certified Gyoseishoshi) and founder of MmowW. Making food safety compliance blissful for businesses worldwide.